Darwinism
/ˈdɑːwɪnɪzəm/noun
mass noun
- the theory of the evolution of species by natural selection advanced by Charles Darwin达尔文主义。
Darwin argued that since offspring tend to vary slightly from their parents, mutations which make an organism better adapted to its environment will be encouraged and developed by the pressures of natural selection, leading to the evolution of new species differing widely from one another and from their common ancestors. Darwinism was later developed by the findings of Mendelian genetics (see NEO-DARWINIAN).
派生词